MEA CULPA

If your photos are featured on this site, it means that you are admired. NOT that your gay. Not every model featured on this blog, is gay. If your work (photos) are featured, we are celebrating your work, it doesn't mean that someone is trying to take money from you. Your just appreciated... Thousands read this blog, and it is growing, exposure is exposure.Please understand that materials on this site were gleaned from the Internet. Credit is given whenever possible. If you wish to receive credit, or wish to have a photo edited or removed, please contact me. (TMPERSPECTIVE@GMAIL.COM)

________________________________________

These pages may contain material suitable ONLY for adults. If you are under the age of 18, kindlyremove yourself immediately. If you find such material offensive or if it is illegal in your country or zone to view such material, kindly disengage and go to another place.

Pages

YOUR DONATIONS ARE WELCOMED

.

I WANT AN EXCLUSIVE FEATURE and FREE photoshoot!

Hey would you like to have an exclusive feature on The Masculine Perspective? Want that FREE exposure? GOOD! A FREE professional Photoshoot? GOOD!Click the "contact me" button, and in the subject line, say "Feature ME!" and send some info, Ill get back to you ASAP! Oh! please know, not EVERY person who submit will be chosen! But it's still LOVE
Thanks!
Sincerely,
Touch

PHOTOGRAPHER FEATURE: THE KING OF LIGHT, DALLAS J. LOGAN

DALLAS J. LOGAN

NEW MODEL FEATURE! THE SEXY MR. KEVIN D. ROSE

YES FOR THE SEXY!!!

SHOWCASE YOUR TALENT! BE A FEATURED MODEL or PHOTOGRAPHER! READ BELOW!

Hey would you like to be featured on The Masculine Perspective? GOOD! Click the "contact me" button, and in the subject line, say "Feature ME!" and send some info, Ill get back to you ASAP! Oh! please know, not EVERY person who submit will be chosen! But it's still LOVE
Thanks!
Sincerely,
Touch

THE BACK ROOM (NSFW)!!

About Me

Blog Archive

Monday, January 3, 2011

Facebook profiles can be set up within minutes to catch up with old friends, but they can also be used to spread rumors and maliciously hurt people.

Starting Saturday, however, using a fake online profile or e-mail address to harm others can lead to a fine of up to $1,000 and one year in jail. The law that creates the new penalties is one of hundreds in California that is taking effect in the new year.

Introduced by state Sen. Joe Simitian, D-Palo Alto, the Facebook law is in reaction to the growing problems surrounding cyberbullying and e-impersonation that are affecting children and adults nationwide.

"What people thought was just a prank is now a violation of law," Simitian said. "I hope this is the first step in changing behavior."

SB 1411, which was signed into law in September, updates an existing impersonation law, originally passed in 1872, to make "online impersonators who assume someone else’s identity to harm, intimidate, threaten or defraud" a crime, according to Simitian.

Cyberbullying has garnered nationwide attention in the past year, with at least three teens committing suicide last fall because of harsh teasing online by their peers.

Simitian listed examples of suicides by teens who were bullied — 18-year-old Tyler Clementi of New Jersey, who was outed as gay by his roommate on the Internet; 15-year-old Billy Lucas of Indiana, who hanged himself after continued bullying from his peers about his sexuality; and 13-year-old Asher Brown of Texas, who shot himself after years of abuse online.

But youths are not the only victims.

Carl Guardino has been affected by the simplicity of creating an e-mail address. The CEO of the Silicon Valley Leadership Group had a person create a fake e-mail address and send malicious notes out to professional contacts harshly criticizing the work of the recipients three times in the past two years.

Guardino said he might know who the culprit is, but the person has not been caught. He hopes the new law will be a deterrent in the future.

"Luckily, [those who received the e-mail] know me well enough to know that e-mail was out of character," Guardino said. "They said awful things. It could have ruined my reputation."

Steve DeWarns, a police officer in the East Bay and founder of Internetchildsafety.net, said on the surface the law is a good idea, but he questioned its ability to help investigators crack cases.

"I’m hoping this law provides more awareness that people are going to take it serious," DeWarns said.

He said the ease with which anyone can create a profile or e-mail account is what makes tracking and finding the culprits that much more difficult.

"When relationships dissolve or a business partnership breaks up, people are looking at ways to lash out, so they go online and say all kinds of things," DeWarns said. "You can still do that, now you just can’t pretend to be someone else."